By : Chloe Hon

I found myself cleaning out my closet

the other day.

At first

it didn’t seem like much.

Just stacks of clothes.

Some which I haven’t worn in years.

Others I simply don’t find

attracting anymore.

But the longer I sat there

looking through them,

the harder it became

to decide what to give away.

I kept finding excuses

to put things back into my drawers. 

Maybe I’ll find an occasion

to wear this again.

Maybe it will look cute

with my new pair of jeans.

Maybe I just forgot

how much I liked it.

Even though 

I already knew

I probably would not wear it again

and eventually forget about it.

Some pieces

weren’t really about the clothes.

They were about

the memories they held.

A sweatshirt 

from my first basketball tournament.

A dress 

I got during my first trip to Japan. 

A pair of jeans

that used to be my favorite.

A bucket hat

I wore everyday in 6th grade.

Each one

held a memory.

Small reminders

of who I used to be.

For a moment

I sat there

reminiscing the 

past.

But closets

only hold so much space.

And life 

keeps moving forward.

So I folded them into a pile 

for my little cousin to wear.

Not because they didn’t mean anything

but because they already had.

Out with the old

that no longer fits my life.

In with the new that awaits 

another version of me.By : Chloe Hon

I found myself cleaning out my closet

the other day.

At first

it didn’t seem like much.

Just stacks of clothes.

Some which I haven’t worn in years.

Others I simply don’t find

attracting anymore.

But the longer I sat there

looking through them,

the harder it became

to decide what to give away.

I kept finding excuses

to put things back into my drawers. 

Maybe I’ll find an occasion

to wear this again.

Maybe it will look cute

with my new pair of jeans.

Maybe I just forgot

how much I liked it.

Even though 

I already knew

I probably would not wear it again

and eventually forget about it.

Some pieces

weren’t really about the clothes.

They were about

the memories they held.

A sweatshirt 

from my first basketball tournament.

A dress 

I got during my first trip to Japan. 

A pair of jeans

that used to be my favorite.

A bucket hat

I wore everyday in 6th grade.

Each one

held a memory.

Small reminders

of who I used to be.

For a moment

I sat there

reminiscing the 

past.

But closets

only hold so much space.

And life 

keeps moving forward.

So I folded them into a pile 

for my little cousin to wear.

Not because they didn’t mean anything

but because they already had.

Out with the old

that no longer fits my life.

In with the new that awaits 

another version of me.

Photo Credit : Unconditionally Her